Los Angeles Times

NEW USE FOR UTILITY BOXES

With few spaces for large murals, artists turn installati­ons into canvases on high-traffic streets in San Diego

- By Andrea Lopez-Villafaña Lopez-Villafaña writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

SAN DIEGO — While cleaning out her late grandfathe­r’s garage one afternoon, artist Yvette Roman found random trinkets, mementos and toys he kept in storage over the years. One of those finds, a dusty marionette, became the inspiratio­n behind her latest public artwork.

On the corner of Market and 25th streets in the San Diego neighborho­od of Sherman Heights, Roman painted a bright pink utility box surrounded with colorful images of puppets — a devil, an old man, the late Mexican artist Frida Kahlo, a woman with a face mask and skeletons.

The “Títeres” art piece, which means “puppets” in Spanish, is one of a dozen utility box paintings recently completed in the neighborho­od by more than 10 artists and community members.

“All communitie­s should have something that defines ... that children can walk past and they could see something of themselves, of their ancestors in the art and the community,” Roman said.

“This project was attempting to draw out a different aspect of the community and put it up in art so

that everybody can see it and experience it.”

The effort is part of a beautifica­tion project led by the Sherman Heights Community Center, a nonprofit that organizes events and projects in the area, said Francisco Soto Jr., program manager for the center.

Sherman Heights is bordered by two highways and the communitie­s of Grant Hill and Logan Heights. Because there are mostly single-family homes in the neighborho­od, it can be difficult to find spaces for murals and public art, said Soto, who has lived in the community

for more than 20 years.

The utility box artwork stopped last year because of the COVID-19 pandemic, but artists started up again in March. Now along the hightraffi­c corridors of Market Street, Island Avenue and 25th Street, pedestrian­s and drivers will find colorful utility

boxes with images inspired by the predominan­tly Latino community.

There are paintings of the Virgin Mary, a serpent dragon the Aztecs called Quetzalcoa­tl, roses, Aztec warriors, a piñata and some Day of the Dead skulls. They are painted mostly with bright colors, standing out in the largely residentia­l community.

Soto said painting the utility boxes helps address issues with graffiti because the boxes are easy targets for tagging.

The project has been well received by the community, Soto said, with many other neighborho­ods asking for the group to paint their utility boxes.

Groups have completed similar projects in such neighborho­ods as East Village, Clairemont, Encanto and Kearny Mesa. San Diego Gas & Electric often sponsors utility art projects to provide artists a platform to beautify the region’s communitie­s, said Jessica Packard, spokespers­on for the utility.

“Their utility box artwork helps strengthen community identity, as artists typically weave in themes or history that are important to the communitie­s where the artwork is located,” she said.

The community center and artists would like to paint more boxes in Sherman Heights, but they must seek additional funding.

“It’s a sense of pride,” Soto said. “Something visual that brings up the community.”

 ?? Brittany Cruz-Fejeran San Diego Union-Tribune ?? ARTIST YVETTE ROMAN poses next to her piece “Títeres” — which means “puppets” in Spanish — one of a dozen utility box paintings recently completed in the Sherman Heights neighborho­od of San Diego.
Brittany Cruz-Fejeran San Diego Union-Tribune ARTIST YVETTE ROMAN poses next to her piece “Títeres” — which means “puppets” in Spanish — one of a dozen utility box paintings recently completed in the Sherman Heights neighborho­od of San Diego.

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